Jeff Kunkel

Jeff Kunkel
Kunkel with the Texas Rangers c. 1987
Shortstop
Born: (1961-03-25) March 25, 1961 (age 63)
West Palm Beach, Florida, U.S.
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
MLB debut
July 23, 1984, for the Texas Rangers
Last MLB appearance
September 14, 1992, for the Chicago Cubs
MLB statistics
Batting average.221
Home runs18
Runs batted in73
Teams

Jeffrey William Kunkel (born March 25, 1961[1]) is an American former shortstop in Major League Baseball with the Texas Rangers and Chicago Cubs.

The son of the late American League pitcher and umpire Bill Kunkel,[2] after receiving All-American honors as a shortstop, he was chosen in the first round (3rd overall) of the 1983 Major League Baseball Draft[2] out of Rider University.

Growing up in the Leonardo section of Middletown Township, New Jersey,[3] Kunkel was an all-around athlete who participated in soccer, basketball and baseball during his high school years at Middletown High School South in New Jersey.[4] He was selected as #74 of the top 100 Jersey Shore athletes of the millennium by the Asbury Park Press in 1999.

Kunkel reached the big leagues quickly, but never developed into a full-time player. The Rangers gave him the opportunity to win the starting shortstop position, but he was always thwarted by his hitting stats and obstacles such as Curtis Wilkerson, Scott Fletcher, Fred Manrique, Gary Green, and Jeff Huson.

Plagued with numerous potential career-ending injuries, Kunkel worked hard to rehabilitate himself to finish an 11-year professional baseball career with 5½ years in the major leagues.

A versatile player with the ability to play 8 of the 9 positions on the field, he actually pitched three times in mop-up stints.[1]

  1. ^ a b "Jeff Kunkel". www.retrosheet.org.
  2. ^ a b Charlton, James; Shatzkin, Mike; Holtje, Stephen (1990). The Ballplayers: baseball's ultimate biographical reference. New York: Arbor House/William Morrow. pp. 592. ISBN 0-87795-984-6.
  3. ^ Alfano, Peter. "Players; Enduring Triple A And A Painful Loss", The New York Times, June 11, 1985. Accessed February 3, 2008. "He joked about the bonus that Jeff would sign, comparing it to his own miserly wages as a ballplayer. He enjoyed answering the telephone at the family's home in Leonardo, N.J., where scouts would call regularly."
  4. ^ Jeff Kunkel, The Baseball Cube. Accessed February 3, 2008.